With Nifty hovering around 24,000, many investors are asking whether the index can hold its ground. Independent market expert Daljeet Kohli has a clear answer: stop watching the index and start hunting for quality stocks at beaten-down prices.Kohli argues that geopolitical uncertainty, while unsettling, is creating buying opportunities in specific pockets of the market. Sentiment-driven corrections in fundamentally strong companies, he says, are exactly where long-term wealth is built.Sector-by-sector viewETMarkets.comOn pharma, Kohli is particularly excited about the semaglutide (GLP-1) opportunity. With the molecule set to go off-patent in roughly 80 countries, including Brazil, Canada, and much of the MENA region, he recommends building a basket covering domestic generics players, international exporters, and API or pen-device suppliers to the space. He calls pharma a favourite sector for at least the next two to three quarters.MORE STORIES FOR YOU✕« Back to recommendation storiesI don't want to see these stories becauseThey are not relevant to meThey disrupt the reading flowOthersSUBMIT"In pharma you can make a basket of three to four stocks, domestic generics, international exporters, and pen or API suppliers, and play the semaglutide opportunity across multiple angles."— Daljeet KohliIn the power sector, Kohli sees a broad investment chain: gas generators, equipment manufacturers, cable companies, and power financiers all stand to benefit. On autos, he frames near-term margin pressure from higher input costs as a temporary and well-telegraphed headwind — a window to buy quality OEMs and ancillary companies 5–10% cheaper than their intrinsic value, given that demand fundamentals remain intact.For banking, Kohli is cautious on large private and PSU banks until asset quality trends through a potential stress cycle. Instead, he favours mid-cap private lenders attracting foreign investor interest, microfinance companies where the cycle is turning, and housing finance NBFCs that have been slow movers for two years and may be due a re-rating.On oil marketing companies, his stance is categorical: avoid. Regulatory interference, price controls, and the tendency for gains to be captured by the exchequer rather than shareholders make OMCs a structurally unattractive space for minority investors regardless of oil price direction.The overarching message from Kohli is one of disciplined opportunism. Macro factors — geopolitical headlines, index levels, inflation prints — will keep shifting. Investors who stay agile, keep their eyes on company-level fundamentals, and use sentiment-driven dips to accumulate quality names at reasonable prices are best positioned for the one-to-two year horizon.
Be stock-specific, look for bargains: Daljeet Kohli on Nifty at 24,000 and top sector picks
Market expert Daljeet Kohli advises investors to focus on quality stocks at discounted prices, rather than the Nifty's movement. He highlights opportunities in pharmaceuticals, particularly the semaglutide market, and the power sector. Kohli also suggests selective investments in autos, mid-cap banks, and housing finance, while cautioning against oil marketing companies.









